1,791 research outputs found
Discrimination, Coping, and Depression among Black Men Who Have Sex with Men
Black men who have sex with men (BMSM) have elevated risk for depression compared to the general population. BMSMâs capacity to cope with these experiences is not well understood. Increased understanding of how multiple forms of discrimination contribute to depression and how BMSM cope with discrimination can better inform interventions. Data come from 3,510 BMSM who attended Black Pride events in six U.S. cities from 2015-2017. Participants completed a health survey that ascertained their psychosocial health and resiliency profiles. Using multivariable logistic regression models, we tested the associations between type-specific discrimination (race, sexuality, HIV status) and depression. We then conducted sub-analyses to determine if coping attenuated the association between type-specific discrimination and depression. Our findings indicated that increased odds of depression among BMSM were associated with discrimination based on race (aOR=1.38, 95% CI = 1.08-1.76), sexual orientation (aOR=1.32, 95% CI = 1.01-1.72), and HIV status (aOR=1.53, 95% CI = 1.08-2.17). Sub-analyses indicated coping had inconsistent moderation effects between type-specific discrimination and depression. Our findings demonstrate that impact of various forms of discrimination on BMSMâs mental health and the mitigating role of coping. Interventions should seek to address depression by reducing experiences of discrimination and building coping resiliency
Analytical solution of thermal magnetization on memory stabilizer structures
We return to the question of how the choice of stabilizer generators affects
the preservation of information on structures whose degenerate ground state
encodes a classical redundancy code. Controlled-not gates are used to transform
the stabilizer Hamiltonian into a Hamiltonian consisting of uncoupled single
spins and/or pairs of spins. This transformation allows us to obtain an
analytical partition function and derive closed form equations for the relative
magnetization and susceptibility. These equations are in agreement with the
numerical results presented in [arXiv:0907.0394v1] for finite size systems.
Analytical solutions show that there is no finite critical temperature, Tc=0,
for all of the memory structures in the thermodynamic limit. This is in
contrast to the previously predicted finite critical temperatures based on
extrapolation. The mismatch is a result of the infinite system being a poor
approximation even for astronomically large finite size systems, where
spontaneous magnetization still arises below an apparent finite critical
temperature. We extend our analysis to the canonical stabilizer Hamiltonian.
Interestingly, Hamiltonians with two-body interactions have a higher apparent
critical temperature than the many-body Hamiltonian.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, analytical solutions of problems studied
numerically in arXiv:0907.0394v1 [quant-ph
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Measles vaccination and antibody response in autism spectrum disorder
OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that measles vaccination was involved in the pathogenesis of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) as evidenced by signs of a persistent measles infection or abnormally persistent immune response shown by circulating measles virus or raised antibody titres in children with ASD who had been vaccinated against measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) compared with controls. DESIGN: Case-control study, community based. METHODS: A community sample of vaccinated children aged 10-12 years in the UK with ASD (n = 98) and two control groups of similar age, one with special educational needs but no ASD (n = 52) and one typically developing group (n = 90), were tested for measles virus and antibody response to measles in the serum. RESULTS: No difference was found between cases and controls for measles antibody response. There was no dose-response relationship between autism symptoms and antibody concentrations. Measles virus nucleic acid was amplified by reverse transcriptase-PCR in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from one patient with autism and two typically developing children. There was no evidence of a differential response to measles virus or the measles component of the MMR in children with ASD, with or without regression, and controls who had either one or two doses of MMR. Only one child from the control group had clinical symptoms of possible enterocolitis. CONCLUSION: No association between measles vaccination and ASD was shown
HST/NICMOS observations of a proto-brown dwarf candidate
We present deep HST/NICMOS observations peering through the outflow cavity of
the protostellar candidate IRAS 04381+2540 in the Taurus Molecular Cloud-1. A
young stellar object as central source, a jet and a very faint and close (0.6")
companion are identified. The primary and the companion have similar colours,
consistent with strong reddening. We argue that the companion is neither a
shock-excited knot nor a background star. The colour/magnitude information
predicts a substellar upper mass limit for the companion, but the final
confirmation will require spectroscopic information. Because of its geometry,
young age and its rare low-mass companion, this system is likely to provide a
unique insight into the formation of brown dwarfs.Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics Letters, in press; 4 pages, 2 figure
Berry's conjecture and information theory
It is shown that, by applying a principle of information theory, one obtains
Berry's conjecture regarding the high-lying quantal energy eigenstates of
classically chaotic systems.Comment: 8 pages, no figure
The earliest phases of high-mass star formation: a 3 square degree millimeter continuum mapping of Cygnus X
We have made an extensive 1.2mm continuum mosaicing study of the Cygnus X
molecular cloud complex using the MAMBO cameras at the IRAM 30 m telescope. We
then compared our mm maps with mid-IR images, and have made SiO(2-1) follow-up
observations of the best candidate progenitors of high-mass stars. Our complete
study of Cygnus X provides, for the first time, an unbiased census of massive
young stellar objects. We discover 129 massive dense cores, among which 42 are
probable precursors of high-mass stars. Our study qualifies 17 cores as good
candidates for hosting massive IR-quiet protostars, while up to 25 cores
potentially host high-luminosity IR protostars. We fail to discover the
high-mass analogs of pre-stellar dense cores in CygnusX, but find several
massive starless clumps that might be gravitationally bound. Since our sample
is derived from a single molecular complex and covers every embedded phase of
high-mass star formation, it gives the first statistical estimates of their
lifetime. In contrast to what is found for low-mass class 0 and class I phases,
the IR-quiet protostellar phase of high-mass stars may last as long as their
better-known high-luminosity IR phase. The statistical lifetimes of high-mass
protostars and pre-stellar cores (~ 3 x 10^4 yr and < 10^3 yr) in Cygnus X are
one and two order(s) of magnitude smaller, respectively, than what is found in
nearby, low-mass star-forming regions. We therefore propose that high-mass
pre-stellar and protostellar cores are in a highly dynamic state, as expected
in a molecular cloud where turbulent processes dominate.Comment: 32 pages, 62 figures to be published in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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Impact of Insecticides on Parasitoids of the Leafminer, Liriomyza trifolii, in Pepper in South Texas
Liriomyza leafminers (Diptera: Agromyzidae) are cosmopolitan, polyphagous pests of horticultural plants and many are resistant to insecticides. Producers in South Texas rely on insecticides as the primary management tool for leafminers, and several compounds are available. The objective of this study is to address the efficacy of these compounds for controlling Liriomyza while minimizing their effects against natural enemies. Research plots were established at Texas AgriLife research center at Weslaco, Texas in fall 2007 and spring 2008 seasons, and peppers were used as a model crop. Plots were sprayed with novaluron, abamectin, spinetoram, lambda-cyhalothrin and water as treatments according to leafminer infestation; insecticide efficacy was monitored by collecting leaves and infested foliage. Plant phenology was also monitored. Novaluron was the most effective insecticide and lambda-cyhalothrin showed resurgence in leafminer density in fall 2007 and no reduction in spring 2008. Other compounds varied in efficacy. Novaluron showed the least number of parasitoids per leafminer larva and the lowest parasitoid diversity index among treatments followed by spinetoram. Liriomyza trifolii (Burgess) was the sole leafminer species on peppers, and 19 parasitoid species were found associated with this leafminer. Application of these insecticides for management of leafminers with conservation of natural enemies is discussed
Resilience beyond neoliberalism? Mystique of complexity, financial crises, and the reproduction of neoliberal life
The burgeoning debate on resilience in international relations has seen the emergence of two polarized views: resilience as a manifestation of neoliberal governmentality and resilience as the expression of a post-neoliberal shift. This article explores whether a post-neoliberal resilience may be possible by reflecting upon the ontology of complexity as unknowability at the heart of this view. It argues that this approach neglects how the discourse of complexity as unknowability is a neoliberal technology of government that is instrumental to advance neoliberal forms of resilience. The second half of the article discusses this argument with reference to the 2008 financial crisis. It shows how a resilience-as-post-neoliberal approach resonates with those dominant narratives which have shrouded the causes and mechanics of the crisis in a mystique of complexity, thus encouraging forms of cognitive and political disengagement. The article concludes that by celebrating local knowledge at the expense of an understanding of global dynamics, post-neoliberal resilience offers an impoverished notion of resistance compliant with the dictates of the neoliberal order
Predictors of Antibiotics Co-prescription with Antimalarials for Patients Presenting with Fever in Rural Tanzania.
Successful implementation of malaria treatment policy depends on the prescription practices for patients with malaria. This paper describes prescription patterns and assesses factors associated with co-prescription of antibiotics and artemether-lumefantrine (AL) for patients presenting with fever in rural Tanzania. From June 2009 to September 2011, a cohort event monitoring program was conducted among all patients treated at 8 selected health facilities in Ifakara and Rufiji Health and Demographic Surveillance System (HDSS).It included all patients presenting with fever and prescribed with AL. Logistic regression was used to model the predictors on the outcome variable which is co-prescription of AL and antibiotics on a single clinical visit. A cohort of 11,648 was recruited and followed up with 92% presenting with fever. Presumptive treatment was used in 56% of patients treated with AL. On average 2.4 (1 -- 7) drugs was prescribed per encounter, indicating co-prescription of AL with other drugs. Children under five had higher odds of AL and antibiotics co-prescription (OR = 0.63, 95% CI: 0.46 -- 0.85) than those aged more than five years. Patients testing negative had higher odds (OR = 2.22, 95%CI: 1.65 -- 2.97) of AL and antibiotics co-prescription. Patients receiving treatment from dispensaries had higher odds (OR = 1.45, 95% CI: 0.84 -- 2.30) of AL and antibiotics co-prescription than those from served in health centres even though the deference was not statistically significant. Regardless the fact that Malaria is declining but due to lack of laboratories and mRDT in most health facilities in the rural areas, clinicians are still treating malaria presumptively. This leads them to prescribe more drugs to treat all possibilities
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